The Site of Protonation Affects the Dissociation of Protonated a- and
b-Pinene Ions
Abstract
The unimolecular reactions of protonated α- and β-pinene ions were
explored with a combination of collision-induced dissociation tandem
mass spectrometry and theory. The two main dissociation reactions in
each ion lead to the losses of neutral propene and isobutene. The
difference observed between the two ions is a greater relative abundance
of propene loss in the case of protonated a-pinene. Both ions were found
to dissociate over the same minimum energy reaction pathway, the only
difference being the site of initial protonation in the two ions.
a-Pinene preferentially protonates at the bridging carbon, while
b-pinene can only significantly protonate at the exocyclic double bond.
This leads to a lower appearance energy for loss of isobutene, and thus
relatively greater m/z 81 fragment ion abundance for b-pinene.